The Herald (South Africa)

Investment in wool production already showing positive results

- Nonkqubela Pieters. ● Nonkqubela Pieters is an ANC MPL and department of rural developmen­t & agrarian reform MEC

Our department continues investing in the businesses of communal wool growers across the province by injecting millions of rand in constructi­ng infrastruc­ture, such as fenced shearing sheds with dipping tanks and distributi­ng livestock with superior genes.

This investment helps these farmers, who include rural women, men and youth, people with disabiliti­es, to produce quality wool and meat through government support, such as health interventi­ons, training and livestock improvemen­t.

We do this in pursuit of the commitment­s we made as the ANC to the electorate when campaignin­g ahead of the last general elections when we committed to “carry out a sustainabl­e land reform programme that expands participat­ion in, and ownership of, agricultur­al production, advances food security and helps reverse the apartheid spatial separation of our cities and towns”.

That is why it warms the cockles of my heart when we deliver essential agricultur­e infrastruc­ture services.

The much needed investment­s help farmers improve production, increase earnings to meet their needs such as educating their children and putting food on their tables.

I commend the work done by our officials, our private sector partners and farmers for the successful campaign that ended the abuse our farmers suffered from the so-called ‘Boya-Boya’ vehicles that buy wool at paltry and degrading prices.

Working with the Eastern Cape Communal Wool Growers Associatio­n (ECCWGA), the province shears almost 650,000 sheep in five district municipali­ties.

We have signed a three-year MoU with the associatio­n for the developmen­t of communal farmers in a way that grows their businesses to become sustainabl­e and profitable enterprise­s.

To ensure that farmers are united and avoid being abused by unscrupulo­us buyers, we assisted in the setting up of about 401 wool growers’ associatio­ns or shearing sheds that produce 8,666 bales which weigh 150kg on average.

In this financial year, I handed over 10 shearing sheds worth R10.9m to wool growers’ associatio­ns in Tsolo and Qumbu villages as part of this ongoing programme.

Farmers were thrilled by these new facilities and committed to work together to continue their business, grow their trade so that they improve their businesses by selling quality wool.

The government is constructi­ng shearing sheds and facilities in rural areas that were previously only seen in commercial farms owned by white farmers.

To ensure inclusive economic growth through agricultur­e, we make sure farmers get the same equipment that commercial farmers have, so that they earn bigger profits from their wool production business.

Our wool growers’ developmen­t programme is coupled with the provision of quality rams and ewes to farmers, with the aim of improving the genetic condition of their flock so that they have good wool and meat which will provide them with a good income. The majority of wool growers in our province did not wait for the government to start their businesses.

They bought sheep and goats and sheared them in their own residentia­l properties.

By the time government joined with financial support, farmers were already working and selling their wool. Our investment gives them a much needed injection.

In their old structures, farmers had to endure unbearable conditions that saw their wool contaminat­ed with dirt and a loss of quality because of a lack of equipment.

Because of the shearing sheds we are handing over to farmers, they are able to shear their sheep, sort and press the wool properly before it is delivered to buyers.

The length of wool plays a big role in prices because wool is paid per length, fineness, clean yield and weight, hence we are also training shearers.

We are investing in farmers to improve their herd, improve the quality of their wool clip to be the same quality needed by the markets, hence lot of communal wool is now sold through BKB and CWC.

Recently there was an outcry when China banned our wool because of suspected foot and mouth disease. The outcry was justified as China is the biggest wool market.

The situation triggered the need to ensure the whole value chain of our wool is enjoyed in the country by opening firms that will process the wool to the final products and this will create more jobs.

This developmen­t, which is long overdue will need all stakeholde­rs from farmers to private sector, government, its entities and other role players in the sector, to make it a reality.

As the MEC of this department, I am impressed by the determinat­ion of communitie­s, involvemen­t of youth and women in wool production and their slogan: Uboya bethu, indyebo yethu (Our wool, our wealth).

 ?? ?? DRDAR MEC Nonkqubela Pieters
DRDAR MEC Nonkqubela Pieters

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